Human beings are far more sensitive than can be accounted
for by sight, hearing, touch, taste, and smell. We react
in different ways to people and places, feeling them to
be beneficial to us or not, although such differences cannot
be accounted for by the way they look.
A person might walk into the room and appear perfectly normal,
in that they are dressed like everyone else and behave in
much the same way, but we might feel suddenly, unaccountably
distressed. Or we might walk into a room and feel uncomfortable
in it, although it is clean and well furnished. It may even
be our own home that feels, at times, uncomfortable in a
way we cannot explain.
Unseen energies are a part of life and, although invisible,
affect us deeply and even change the course of our actions.
People say they just want to get out of there. And although
we may not have the same feeling, we understand that some
unpleasant energy phenomenon has taken place, and reply,
it’s okay, let’s go. You often hear people say
of a person he or she saps my energy and although there
is no energy to see, we know exactly what they mean, and
sympathize. You even hear people occasionally say I felt
a presence in the room is and although we don’t know
exactly what this is presence is, we have known similar
experiences at some point in our lives, and accept what
they say.
Even though we may have a limited vocabulary to describe
these invisible energy experiences, they are there nonetheless.
If invisibility meant nonexistence, there would be no such
thing as portable radios, televisions, and mobile telephones,
because these are the receiving hardware that interpret
bits of invisible information floating through the air.
Our bodies are the receivers of other, natural, unseen energies,
some of which are not welcome in our lives.
Judging by the number of age-old talismans, ceremonies,
and rituals people use around the world, dealing with these
unseen forces has been a very widespread human activity,
with them being variously perceived as bad luck, such as
the evil eye, spirits, and in more modern times, negative
thought forms, distressed emotional frequencies, and other
similar terms. Some Christians wear a St. Christopher’s
medal as a pendant, to protect them while traveling, or
the cross of the Crucifixion, while a feng shui expert might
rearrange the furniture in a building to redirect the wind
and water’s forces, to bring good energies and fortune.
When dealing with the invisible forces, and despite differences
in belief, geographical location, and time, people have
often used fragrance as a protective shield between them
and the perceived negativity. This manipulation of fragrance
for spiritual ends binds people very distant from each other
in belief, space, and time, and often they use the same
widely dispersed species of plant to facilitate more or
less the same effect. Cedarwood, pine, and juniper are among
those plants that have been widely adopted in this way.
Native Americans living along the Thompson River burned
juniper to keep ghosts away, and in Tibet juniper is offered
daily to good spirits. In several Native American cultures,
the aroma of burning sweetgrass or sage purifies the energies
and attracts the supernaturals. In Arabic homes today, on
Thursdays, frankincense is burnt in a censer and carried
through the living rooms and bedrooms to expel evil spirits
and invite the angels in. In the souk in Cairo, Egypt, and
elsewhere, people make a living going from shop to shop,
censing each in turn with frankincense burnt in a censer,
or even on a small piece of charcoal in a rusty tin can,
to dispel any negative energy customers may have left behind,
making the environment more inviting to potential customers.
Such practices have been going on for millennia. The ancient
Mesopotamians, Egyptians, Greeks, and Romans all used fragrance
not only to attract beneficial energy, but to keep inauspicious
energies at bay. The Greeks fumigated homes with bay leaves,
while in the early days of Rome, verbena or other fragrant
plants were hung above doorways to deter il malocchio, the
evil eye. Censers were kept burning by front doors in classical
times, even by the poorer households.
In medieval Europe, witches were the feared bad spirit,
and rituals were carried out at pivotal points in the year
with the object of dispelling them from the vicinity. These
often involved walking through the village or town waving
bunches of smoldering fragrant herbs or woods, to send the
aroma into every nook and cranny. Juniper and rosemary were
among those widely used. In the feng shui spirit-placating
rite, tun fu, incense is used.